Abstract
Nurses working in perianesthesia care areas use discharge scoring criteria to complete patient assessments and ensure patient readiness for discharge or transfer to the next phase of recovery. However, all discharge criteria have both advantages and disadvantages. Comparative studies on the reliability of the different discharge criteria in use are extremely limited. As the acuity of our aging population increases, as well as the number of annual surgeries performed on an outpatient basis, it is most timely to ensure that we are following evidence-based discharge criteria.
MeSH terms
-
Activities of Daily Living
-
Ambulatory Surgical Procedures / adverse effects
-
Ambulatory Surgical Procedures / nursing*
-
Anesthesia Recovery Period
-
Apgar Score
-
Blood Gas Analysis / nursing
-
Clinical Nursing Research
-
Consciousness
-
Humans
-
Nursing Assessment / organization & administration*
-
Nursing Evaluation Research
-
Pain, Postoperative / diagnosis
-
Pain, Postoperative / nursing
-
Patient Discharge / standards*
-
Postanesthesia Nursing / organization & administration*
-
Postoperative Care / methods
-
Postoperative Care / nursing
-
Postoperative Nausea and Vomiting / diagnosis
-
Postoperative Nausea and Vomiting / nursing
-
Psychomotor Performance
-
Reproducibility of Results